This topic has been argued at least once a week since this forum began and we're no closer to a resolution on the topic. Thus far mosly the Neverpluggers have chimed in, but there's a hearty clan of Plugaways in the area too that should get to the party at some point.

Bottom line is this: If you are uncomfortable riding on a plugged or patched tire then you need to buy a new one. The last thing you need to have running through your head while riding is a worry that your patched or plugged tire is not going to hold.

I've done thousands of miles, city and mountain (no track), on plugged tires (rear only) with no problems. Do it right and it will last the life of the tire.

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This motorcycle is simply too goddamn fast to ride at speed in any kind of normal road traffic unless you're ready to go straight down the centerline with your nuts on fire and a silent scream in your throat. ~Hunter S. Thompson

Respectfully speaking - you can not guarantee this and it's potentially dangerous advice. Failure is not always due to the installation of the patch or plug. Motorcycle tires flex a lot more than car tires, which are what tire repair kits are truly designed for.
I've spoken with a few folks that have had a plug come out, and almost every case involved either higher speeds or lots of side-to-side transitions. Either scenario is not the time to lose control. When the rear tire rapidly loses air, it's extremely hard to steer the bike, not something you need to deal with when traveling at speed around a tight curve. Been there myself - I know how it feels.

This topic has been argued at least once a week since this forum began and we're no closer to a resolution on the topic. Thus far mosly the Neverpluggers have chimed in, but there's a hearty clan of Plugaways in the area too that should get to the party at some point.
=.

lol @ your post. so true. My life is worth more than $200 bones. i would get a new tire. but i am not the OP.

Respectfully speaking - you can not guarantee this and it's potentially dangerous advice. Failure is not always due to the installation of the patch or plug. Motorcycle tires flex a lot more than car tires, which are what tire repair kits are truly designed for.
I've spoken with a few folks that have had a plug come out, and almost every case involved either higher speeds or lots of side-to-side transitions. Either scenario is not the time to lose control. When the rear tire rapidly loses air, it's extremely hard to steer the bike, not something you need to deal with when traveling at speed around a tight curve. Been there myself - I know how it feels.

I can't guarantee that the OP won't walk out in front of a bus, but if he looks both ways before he steps off the curb he's much less likely to.

Obviously an internal patch or even patch/plug is optimal, but speaking for myself, I have plugged rears (that sounds dirty ) more than a few times and the plugs have lasted the life of the tires. On these bikes, what are we talking, 3000 miles max on a rear on these bikes with the stock tire? A properly installed, self-vulcanizing mushroom-type plug is what I am talking about here, not the rope style plug.

Losing air for any reason at any speed under any condition is not a great feeling, but I haven't heard of a catastrophic plug failure that resulted in faster air loss than the original puncture. In other words, it ain't gonna to blow out. If the OP is worried about his tires doing anything other than sticking to the pavement while in a tight turn he should rethink being in a tight turn in the first place, regardless of whether his tires are plugged or virgin (again, sounds dirty ).

Besides, you think that simply plugging is dangerous, check this shit out :

All kidding aside, don't listen to me. I'm part of the Plugaway clan, but I have kin in the Neverpluggers. Do what makes you feel safe on the bike.

__________________
This motorcycle is simply too goddamn fast to ride at speed in any kind of normal road traffic unless you're ready to go straight down the centerline with your nuts on fire and a silent scream in your throat. ~Hunter S. Thompson

Apologies. Didn't read the guidelines on what topics deserve threads or not. Delete this if deemed unworthy.

Is there also a list of local trolls? ;)

Don't worry about it. I too have been scorned by the triumph675 police for not obeying the not-so-transparent ground rules. (maybe somebody can make a list?)

Back to the topic, the same happened to my brother. He went to pick up his GSX-R 600 and ran over a nail. He only noticed it when he came home (pushing a motorcycle with a flat tire is damn hard). Tried to inject the tire with some kind of hardening foam.. Didn't do shit. He's getting a new tire.

Don't worry about it. I too have been scorned by the triumph675 police for not obeying the not-so-transparent ground rules. (maybe somebody can make a list?)

Back to the topic, the same happened to my brother. He went to pick up his GSX-R 600 and ran over a nail. He only noticed it when he came home (pushing a motorcycle with a flat tire is damn hard). Tried to inject the tire with some kind of hardening foam.. Didn't do shit. He's getting a new tire.

Cheers

Omg. Please tell me he did not try to put fix-a-flat in his motorcycle tire.